This link has been bookmarked by 26 people . It was first bookmarked on 17 Apr 2008, by Gary Edwards.
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Paul GreenbergWhat WOA looks like in the enterprise:
* A rich web of REST resources. Instead of a few point SOA services, enterprise data will be exposed through millions of granular REST resources (like the Web itself), which almost any application than can consume HTTP and XML can use. Much higher levels of syndication using RSS and ATOM will also be a hallmark of WOA adoption as it has been so successful in unleashing the Web of data on the Internet.
* Simple tools to weave the Web of resources into new applications. There are is a rapidly growing set of tools becoming available to build mashups quickly out of WOA (and SOA if you must) resources. Increasingly, these tools can be used by end-users but developers can very easily compose WOA resource into new solutions. IT developers will also use these tools as well as their own to create interoperability and integration where needed, like they do with SOA now.
* Highly consumable and reusable WOA “parts” including widgets, gadgets, and embedded social apps. There are now tens of thousands of Web components that can project data and functioanlity throughout the Web (and the enterprise) with a simple point and click. In combination with tools like blogs, wikis, and anything else which lets users add markup, this lets users build basic applications out of commonly available parts. Enterprise adopting WOA will take their own WOA resources and package them using popular “widget models” like Google’s OpenSocial and many others. The very presence of these Web parts drives viral adoption of a WOA as other users see them and use them, spreading them to the corners of the organization and beyond.
* Open Web APIs exposed on the Internet to ad hoc partners. Many organizations will start usintheir WOA to work with existing partners and start going into the Web services business, ala Amazon, themselves. We are learning that many organizations are highly underleveraging their vast assets in data and functionality and open them up to the Web in a dynamic way allow innovatio -
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Martin Lindnerwoa, soa, and why the web is the experimental ground for htinking about enterprise apps.
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18 Apr 08
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17 Apr 08
Colin HendersonDeep but important discussion on SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) and how the landscape is moving towards WOA (Web Oriented Architecture) http://blogs.zdnet.com/Hinchcliffe/?p=168
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Dana Gardner recently wrote about here on ZDNet and respected SOA expert David Linthicum covered on Infoworld, the integration and ecosystem models that are working on the Web are increasingly being discussed in the SOA community as potent examples of how to implement SOA with better results. As WOA examples get better and better, it’s emerging solutions to many of the issues we have in getting robust SOAs built with high levels of adoption and measurably better business outcomes.
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Gary EdwardsDion Hinchcliffe's best post yet on SOA interoperability difficulties and the promise of solvign those problems with advancing Web 2.0 technologies.
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Organizations clearly want to leverage high levels of interoperability to seize new business opportunities, innovate on top of existing assets, and properly leverage the extensive landscape of software, data, and infrastructure that most organizations have accumulated in large quantities over the years. But we are still having a great deal of difficulty doing so and SOA investments are just not reaping the types of return on investments that most businesses would like to have.
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